Ars Technica: K Desktop Environment 1.1 Review(Mar 25, 1999, 15:38)
"Personally, I believe that KDE 1.1 is a modestly extensible,
quick, and stable environment, and I think you'll see from this
review that KDE is putting a face on Linux that's bridging the gap
between so-called established, "easy to use" OSes--like Windows and
the MacOS--and Linux, the mythically evil, CLI-based realm of pain
and suffering."

Interactive Week: Open source, closed minds(Mar 25, 1999, 12:53)
"But what transpired was a display of how far the open source
code movement has to go if it is to integrate its own objectives
with the mainstream that it hopes to conquer."

CNET News.com: AOL to cut up to 1,000 jobs(Mar 25, 1999, 10:29)
"America Online today announced a sweeping reorganization that
includes up to 1,000 job cuts divided between AOL and newly
acquired Netscape Communications."

PC Magazine: Linux: An Underdog Emerges(Mar 25, 1999, 10:04)
"Pundits in the industry--including yours truly--have long been
saying that the greatest threat to Microsoft isn't another large
company but rather someone no one has heard of. The idea sounded
good, but when we all started saying it, it was just a theory. Now
that theory is being put to the test. The concept has some history
behind it. From the sixties until the mid-eighties, IBM was the
clear master of the computing universe. While IBM saw larger
companies such as Digital Equipment Corp. and AT&T as its major
competitors, its role was actually usurped by the then-little-known
Microsoft. In the transition from big systems to personal
computers, a new leader emerged."

Computer Currents: Japan PC Makers Hop On Linux(Mar 25, 1999, 09:23)
"For Japanese users and supporters of the Linux operating
system, it's been a good week. A string of announcements from major
hardware makers has pushed Linux towards the big time, and
headlines, in Japan."

LinuxWorld: The Story of The Linux Kernel(Mar 25, 1999, 09:02)
"In this excerpt from O'Reilly & Associates' newly-released
book "Open Sources: Voices from the Open Source Revolution," Linus
Torvalds explains some of the key architectural decisions he made
in bringing the Linux kernel to its present state."